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How to recognize a dystopia - Alex Gendler

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    Have you ever tried to picture
    an ideal world?
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    One without war, poverty, or crime?
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    If so, you're not alone.
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    Plato imagined an enlightened
    republic ruled by philosopher kings,
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    many religions promise
    bliss in the afterlife,
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    and throughout history,
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    various groups have tried to build
    paradise on Earth.
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    Thomas More's 1516 book Utopia
    gave this concept a name,
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    Greek for "no place."
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    Though the name suggested impossibility,
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    modern scientific and political progress
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    raised hopes of these dreams
    finally becoming reality.
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    But time and time again,
    they instead turned into nightmares
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    of war, famine, and oppression.
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    And as artists began to question
    utopian thinking,
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    the genre of dystopia,
    the not good place, was born.
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    One of the earliest dystopian works
    is Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.
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    Throughout his journey, Gulliver
    encounters fictional socieities,
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    some of which at first seem impressive,
    but turn out to be seriously flawed.
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    On the flying island of Laputa,
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    scientists and social planners
    pursue extravagant and useless schemes
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    while neglecting the practical needs
    of the people below.
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    And the Houyhnhnm who live
    in perfectly logical harmony
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    have no tolerance for the imperfections
    of actual human beings.
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    With his novel, Swift established
    a blueprint for dystopia,
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    imagining a world where certain trends
    in contemporary society
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    are taken to extremes,
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    exposing their underlying flaws.
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    And the next few centuries would
    provide plenty of material.
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    Industrial technology that promised
    to free laborers
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    imprisoned them in slums
    and factories, instead,
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    while tycoons grew richer than kings.
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    By the late 1800's, many feared
    where such conditions might lead.
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    H. G. Wells' The Time Machine imagined
    upper classes and workers
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    evolving into separate species,
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    while Jack London's The Iron Heel
    portrayed a tyrannical oligarchy
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    ruling over impoverished masses.
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    The new century brought more exciting
    and terrifying changes.
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    Medical advances made it possible
    to transcend biological limits
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    while mass media allowed instant
    communication
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    between leaders and the public.
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    In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World,
    citizens are genetically engineered
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    and conditioned to perform
    their social roles.
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    While propaganda and drugs keep
    the society happy,
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    it's clear some crucial
    human element is lost.
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    But the best known dystopias
    were not imaginary at all.
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    As Europe suffered unprecedented
    industrial warfare,
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    new political movements took power.
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    Some promised to erase
    all social distinctions,
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    while others sought to unite people
    around a mythical heritage.
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    The results were real-world dystopias
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    where life passed under the watchful eye
    of the State
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    and death came with ruthless efficiency
    to any who didn't belong.
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    Many writers of the time didn't
    just observe these horrors,
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    but lived through them.
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    In his novel We, Soviet writer
    Yevgeny Zamyatin described a future
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    where free will and individuality
    were eliminated.
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    Banned in the U.S.S.R., the book inspired
    authors like George Orwell
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    who fought on the front lines
    against both fascism and communism.
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    While his novel Animal Farm directly
    mocked the Soviet regime,
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    the classic 1984 was a broader critique
    of totalitarianism, media, and language.
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    And in the U.S.A., Sinclair Lewis's
    It Can't Happen Here
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    envisioned how easily democracy
    gave way to fascism.
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    In the decades after World War II,
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    writers wondered what new technologies
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    like atomic energy,
    artificial intelligence, and space travel
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    meant for humanity's future.
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    Contrasting with popular visions
    of shining progress,
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    dystopian science fiction expanded
    to films, comics, and games.
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    Robots turned against their creators
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    while TV screens broadcast
    deadly mass entertainment.
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    Workers toiled in space colonies
    above an Earth of depleted resources
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    and overpopulated, crime-plagued cities.
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    Yet politics was never far away.
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    Works like Dr. Strangelove and Watchmen
    explored the real threat of nuclear war,
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    while V for Vendetta
    and The Handmaid's Tale
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    warned how easily our rights could
    disappear in a crisis.
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    And today's dystopian fiction continues
    to reflect modern anxieties
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    about inequality,
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    climate change,
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    government power,
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    and global epidemics.
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    So why bother with all this pessimism?
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    Because at their heart, dystopias
    are cautionary tales,
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    not about some particular government
    or technology,
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    but the very idea that humanity can be
    molded into an ideal shape.
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    Think back to the perfect world
    you imagined.
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    Did you also imagine what it would
    take to achieve?
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    How would you make people cooperate?
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    And how would you make sure it lasted?
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    Now take another look.
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    Does that world still seem perfect?
Title:
How to recognize a dystopia - Alex Gendler
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:56
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